Premiers from Canada’s four western provinces and the three territories are meeting in Kananaskis Country, west of Calgary, this week.
While the leaders have lots to talk about, it is the possibility of Alberta separatism that looms over the meetings.
The gathering, which Nunavut Premier John Main will participate in virtually, comes just days after Alberta Premier Danielle Smith announced her government will be holding a referendum in October that could set the stage for Alberta’s separation from Canada.
Global News
British Columbia Premier David Eby, who has been butting heads with Smith over her desire for a new pipeline from Alberta to the B.C. coast, said he’s wondering why they are meeting in Alberta to talk co-operation when the host premier wants to test separation.
“To say that this is the worst time to begin testing the bonds that hold this country together is a significant understatement,” said Eby.
“It empowers the people who would break our country up and sell us for parts.”
Eby called Smith’s plans to hold the October vote “reckless,” and said this week’s meeting of western and northern political leaders was supposed to be about addressing internal trade barriers, issues around national defence and economic corridors.
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“These topics seem at best confusing, if not totally awkward in light of the referendum question that Premier Smith has put forward,” he said.
On Monday, the B.C. premier also reiterated his opposition to an oil pipeline to the north coast of B.C., saying the ban on oil tanker traffic in the area cannot be compromised on.
Alberta’s referendum plans were announced as the Smith government moves closer to submitting a proposal to build a new pipeline to the coast by July.
It’s part of an agreement Ottawa has with Alberta that also includes more relaxed carbon pricing for the province.
There isn’t a private proponent yet and industry experts say the referendum adds more uncertainty for potential investors.
“We know that companies don’t like to make decisions when there’s uncertainty and separating isn’t going to help that,” said Richard Masson, former CEO of the Alberta Petroleum Marketing Commission.
“The industry has been trying to find better market access and this is counter to that.”
While Smith said she’s looking forward to working with Eby this week, she also levelled some criticism of her own, reiterating her claims that political leaders across the country have fomented separatism in Alberta by throwing hurdles in the way of the province’s oil industry.
She has pointed the finger at her old nemesis, former prime minister Justin Trudeau, Liberal MPs in Ottawa, federal NDP Leader Avi Lewis and leadership in B.C.
On Monday, she singled out Eby and several former premiers.
“It’s not only the current premier, but John Horgan, and Christy Clark — it goes back a long way,” said Smith, who accused them of stifling the construction of critical infrastructure to the West Coast.
“These ports are not British Columbia’s ports. They’re Canada’s ports.”
Despite Smith changing her own citizen initiative laws multiple times in the past year to clear the way for a separatist petition, Smith has argued that the push to secede didn’t emerge overnight.
“You get there because of successive barriers to us being able to realize our economic prosperity and be able to attract investment and be able to govern ourselves,” she said.
“I think that there just needs to be self-reflection.”
Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe also weighed in on the referendum on Monday, saying he believes Smith didn’t have a choice but to announce the vote under her provincial law.
“We have 10 years of unconsulted, harmful policy by the previous prime minister,” he said.
While Moe said he aligns closely with Smith’s position on Alberta remaining in Canada, as the premier of Saskatchewan, he said it’s not for him to judge Albertans.
–with files from The Canadian Press
© 2026 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.
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